Analytical active earth thrust on cantilever walls with short heel

2008 ◽  
Vol 45 (12) ◽  
pp. 1649-1658 ◽  
Author(s):  
Venanzio R. Greco

The use of Rankine’s method is inappropriate for calculating active thrusts in cantilever retaining walls with a short heel because the thrust wedge is interrupted by the wall backface. The use of Coulomb’s approach is preferable, but at present only numerical solutions have been proposed to solve the problem. This paper presents an analytical solution, based on Coulomb’s approach, for evaluating the active thrust on cantilever walls with a short heel subjected to homogeneous backfill with a regular topographic profile and without pore pressure. The solution is given by an algorithm where two equations, one quadratic and the other cubic, are solved in turn, in an iterative procedure that converges rapidly. The distribution of lateral pressure and the position of the point of application of the thrust are also given in analytical terms.

1982 ◽  
Vol 22 (05) ◽  
pp. 719-721 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thierry Bourbie ◽  
Joel Walls

Abstract A new analytical solution is presented for the laboratory pulse decay permeability problem. With this solution, pulse decay permeability problem. With this solution, permeability of a core sample can be calculated from the permeability of a core sample can be calculated from the decay rate of a pressure pulse applied to one end of the sample. This development permits rapid. accurate measurement of permeability in samples such as tight gas sands, limestones, and shales. Introduction Because of its usefulness in measuring very low permeability. the pulse decay technique has been permeability. the pulse decay technique has been discussed often in the literature. In this technique, a small pore pressure pulse is applied to one end of a jacketed sample, and the pressure vs. time behavior is observed as the pore fluid moves through the sample from one reservoir to another. Brace et al. cave an approximate solution to this problem with the assumption of a linear pressure gradient at all times. This simplification leads to a predicted exponential pressure vs. time decay. By means of numerical solutions, Lin and Yamada and Jones have shown that the Brace solution can lead to significant errors in calculating permeability. These numerical solutions. however. are inconvenient to use and require considerable computer programming time. We present an analytical solution based on realistic assumptions and boundary conditions. Experimental Technique To understand the theoretical problem more thoroughly, a short description of the experiment is desirable. Fig. 1 is a schematic of the system. Initially, both valves are open and pressure is constant throughout the system. Next, Valve 1 is closed, and the pressure is changed slightly in the large Reservoir 1. Valve 1 remains closed for a few minutes to allow thermal effects to diminish (particularly important if the pore fluid is (as). Valve 2 then is closed, and, at time equal zero. Valve 1 is opened. A small differential pressure between the reservoirs will be indicated by the p transducer and will decrease with time. Pressure in Reservoir 1 remains constant during the decay. After the differential pressure has decreased by approximately 20%, Valve 2 is opened to terminate the decay. This accelerates the equilibration of pressure so that the next measurement can be made. pressure so that the next measurement can be made. Theory As stated earlier, the pressure in Reservoir 1 remains essentially constant during the decay (t 0) because the volume of Reservoir 1, V1, is much greater than the pore volume, Vp, or the volume of Reservoir 2, V2. It can be assumed that fluid viscosity, is independent of position, x, in the sample and that fluid density, p, position, x, in the sample and that fluid density, p, permeability, k, and porosity, are dependent only on permeability, k, and porosity, are dependent only on fluid pressure, P. By combining Darcy's law with the one-dimensional diffusion equation we obtain ,..................(1) where B is fluid compressibility, Bs, is rock compressibility, and Bk is the dependence of permeability on pore pressure. The magnitude of the nonlinear terms pore pressure. The magnitude of the nonlinear terms with respect to the linear ones is equal to (Bk + B)P0, where P0 is the pressure pulse amplitude. Because (Bk - B ) = 10 -2 bar - 1 (Ref. 8) and P0=1 bar, the product is small, and, hence, nonlinear terms can be product is small, and, hence, nonlinear terms can be ignored. If we further assume that the equation of flow is ------- = --- --------, ......................(2) SPEJ P. 719


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (7) ◽  
pp. 2767 ◽  
Author(s):  
Víctor Yepes ◽  
José V. Martí ◽  
José García

The optimization of the cost and CO 2 emissions in earth-retaining walls is of relevance, since these structures are often used in civil engineering. The optimization of costs is essential for the competitiveness of the construction company, and the optimization of emissions is relevant in the environmental impact of construction. To address the optimization, black hole metaheuristics were used, along with a discretization mechanism based on min–max normalization. The stability of the algorithm was evaluated with respect to the solutions obtained; the steel and concrete values obtained in both optimizations were analyzed. Additionally, the geometric variables of the structure were compared. Finally, the results obtained were compared with another algorithm that solved the problem. The results show that there is a trade-off between the use of steel and concrete. The solutions that minimize CO 2 emissions prefer the use of concrete instead of those that optimize the cost. On the other hand, when comparing the geometric variables, it is seen that most remain similar in both optimizations except for the distance between buttresses. When comparing with another algorithm, the results show a good performance in optimization using the black hole algorithm.


2020 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 174830262097353
Author(s):  
Noppadol Chumchob ◽  
Ke Chen

Variational methods for image registration basically involve a regularizer to ensure that the resulting well-posed problem admits a solution. Different choices of regularizers lead to different deformations. On one hand, the conventional regularizers, such as the elastic, diffusion and curvature regularizers, are able to generate globally smooth deformations and generally useful for many applications. On the other hand, these regularizers become poor in some applications where discontinuities or steep gradients in the deformations are required. As is well-known, the total (TV) variation regularizer is more appropriate to preserve discontinuities of the deformations. However, it is difficult in developing an efficient numerical method to ensure that numerical solutions satisfy this requirement because of the non-differentiability and non-linearity of the TV regularizer. In this work we focus on computational challenges arising in approximately solving TV-based image registration model. Motivated by many efficient numerical algorithms in image restoration, we propose to use augmented Lagrangian method (ALM). At each iteration, the computation of our ALM requires to solve two subproblems. On one hand for the first subproblem, it is impossible to obtain exact solution. On the other hand for the second subproblem, it has a closed-form solution. To this end, we propose an efficient nonlinear multigrid (NMG) method to obtain an approximate solution to the first subproblem. Numerical results on real medical images not only confirm that our proposed ALM is more computationally efficient than some existing methods, but also that the proposed ALM delivers the accurate registration results with the desired property of the constructed deformations in a reasonable number of iterations.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Liecheng Sun ◽  
Issam E. Harik

AbstractAnalytical Strip Method is presented for the analysis of the bending-extension coupling problem of stiffened and continuous antisymmetric thin laminates. A system of three equations of equilibrium, governing the general response of antisymmetric laminates, is reduced to a single eighth-order partial differential equation (PDE) in terms of a displacement function. The PDE is then solved in a single series form to determine the displacement response of antisymmetric cross-ply and angle-ply laminates. The solution is applicable to rectangular laminates with two opposite edges simply supported and the other edges being free, clamped, simply supported, isotropic beam supports, or point supports.


1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander V. Kasharin ◽  
Jens O. M. Karlsson

Abstract The process of diffusion-limited cell dehydration is modeled for a planar system by writing the one-dimensional diffusion-equation for a cell with moving, semipermeable boundaries. For the simplifying case of isothermal dehydration with constant diffusivity, an approximate analytical solution is obtained by linearizing the governing partial differential equations. The general problem must be solved numerically. The Forward Time Center Space (FTCS) and Crank-Nicholson differencing schemes are implemented, and evaluated by comparison with the analytical solution. Putative stability criteria for the two algorithms are proposed based on numerical experiments, and the Crank-Nicholson method is shown to be accurate for a mesh with as few as six nodes.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hongfen Gao ◽  
Gaofeng Wei

Combining the finite covering technical and complex variable moving least square, the complex variable meshless manifold method can handle the discontinuous problem effectively. In this paper, the complex variable meshless method is applied to solve the problem of elastic dynamics, the complex variable meshless manifold method for dynamics is established, and the corresponding formula is derived. The numerical example shows that the numerical solutions are in good agreement with the analytical solution. The CVMMM for elastic dynamics and the discrete forms are correct and feasible. Compared with the traditional meshless manifold method, the CVMMM has higher accuracy in the same distribution of nodes.


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